Major League Baseball
Ted Williams Uniform Sells for $70K
Uniform sells for less than expected
Associated Press
BOSTON -- A Ted Williams uniform from 1959 that was
folded up in a paper bag and stored in an attic for a
quarter century sold at auction Sunday for $70,000.
An unidentified buyer phoned in the winning bid for
the Splendid Splinter's No. 9 jersey and pants, less
than the expected price range of $80,000 to $120,000
that appraisers at Skinner Auction House had predicted,
said retired Gloucester physician Robert Jedrey, the
uniform's former owner.
"It seemed like this was the ideal time to consider
putting it up for auction," he said.
Williams, who played for the Red Sox from 1939-60,
was the last player to break the .400 barrier, hitting
.406 in 1941.
Jedrey received the uniform in 1959 when Williams hit
a career-low .254. Al Oliver, a family friend who was
superintendent at Braves Field in Boston, home of the
Boston Braves, gave the uniform to Jedrey. Jedrey does
not know how Oliver got it.
Jedrey folded the uniform into a paper bag, tucked it
in a dresser drawer in the attic of his mother's home
and forgot about it. He remembered it in the late 1980s
when Williams and Joe DiMaggio appeared at Fenway Park.
Jedrey took it to the Sports Museum of New England,
where it was authenticated and displayed. Jedrey sold
the uniform because of the increased interest in
Williams since his death and the excitement surrounding
the 2004 Red Sox.
The most paid for a baseball uniform at auction
appears to be the more than $451,000 an anonymous buyer
spent in 1999 for a Lou Gehrig uniform. It is believed
Gehrig wore the uniform during his famous farewell
speech.
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